The Western Liaohe River Basin in northeastern China is one of the cradles of ancient Chinese civilization. Archaeological records from this region indicate that human occupation began about 8000 years ago and that agriculture and pastoralism were important activities from an early stage. Very little is known, however, about the effects that these activities had upon the landscape. This paper presents the results of a palaeoecological study from a 3.6 m sedimentary sequence in a relict oxbow lake in the Western Liaohe River Basin of southeast Inner Mongolia. The 5400-yr sequence indicates that human activities had a noticeable impact on an apparently open landscape. Buckwheat cultivation began as early as 5400 cal. yr BP with intensificatio...
The Neolithic period witnessed the start and spread of agriculture across Eurasia, as well as the be...
The lower Yangtze, eastern China, was colonized by several Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures giving ...
Understanding the societal impacts of past climate changes may deepen our insight into human adaptat...
The Western Liaohe River Basin in northeastern China is one of the cradles of ancient Chinese civili...
The Western Liaohe River Basin in northeastern China is one of the cradles of ancient Chinese civili...
Sedimentary evidence from a total of 21 AMS C-14 dates and 192 pollen and charcoal and 181 phytolith...
The Xinzhai Period (3550-3400 aBP) belongs to Late Neolithic Culture, which bridges the Longshan Cul...
Analyses of sedimentary evidence in the form of spores, pollen, freshwater algae, dinoflagellate cys...
A 6.48 m sediment core sequence from Erhai lake, Yunnan Province, provides a multi-proxy record of H...
In this paper, we summarize the Holocene environmental history of the lower Yangtze region, east Chi...
Knowledge of the past interactions between climate and human land use is essential for understanding...
The taxonomic identification of fossil charcoal can be a useful archaeobotanical tool, as it can rev...
The taxonomic identification of fossil charcoal can be a useful archaeobotanical tool, as it can rev...
Numerous environmental archaeology studies have been undertaken in the middle and lower reaches of t...
Environmental changes in Pleistocene and the breeding of primitive agriculture in late Paleolithic A...
The Neolithic period witnessed the start and spread of agriculture across Eurasia, as well as the be...
The lower Yangtze, eastern China, was colonized by several Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures giving ...
Understanding the societal impacts of past climate changes may deepen our insight into human adaptat...
The Western Liaohe River Basin in northeastern China is one of the cradles of ancient Chinese civili...
The Western Liaohe River Basin in northeastern China is one of the cradles of ancient Chinese civili...
Sedimentary evidence from a total of 21 AMS C-14 dates and 192 pollen and charcoal and 181 phytolith...
The Xinzhai Period (3550-3400 aBP) belongs to Late Neolithic Culture, which bridges the Longshan Cul...
Analyses of sedimentary evidence in the form of spores, pollen, freshwater algae, dinoflagellate cys...
A 6.48 m sediment core sequence from Erhai lake, Yunnan Province, provides a multi-proxy record of H...
In this paper, we summarize the Holocene environmental history of the lower Yangtze region, east Chi...
Knowledge of the past interactions between climate and human land use is essential for understanding...
The taxonomic identification of fossil charcoal can be a useful archaeobotanical tool, as it can rev...
The taxonomic identification of fossil charcoal can be a useful archaeobotanical tool, as it can rev...
Numerous environmental archaeology studies have been undertaken in the middle and lower reaches of t...
Environmental changes in Pleistocene and the breeding of primitive agriculture in late Paleolithic A...
The Neolithic period witnessed the start and spread of agriculture across Eurasia, as well as the be...
The lower Yangtze, eastern China, was colonized by several Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures giving ...
Understanding the societal impacts of past climate changes may deepen our insight into human adaptat...